The Feedback Flywheel
Written by: Sandra Ditski – Digital Efficiency Consulting Group – DECG
Read Time: 3 min
Collecting feedback is polite. Closing the loop is memorable. Customers don’t reward you for asking; they reward you for doing something with what they told you.
What ‘closed loop’ really means
Closed loop is a system that absorbs feedback and responds, both to individuals and to the business as a whole. If it ends at ‘we saw the score,’ it’s not closed. It’s abandoned.
Two loops you need
- Individual loop: follow up with a specific customer after a poor experience. Acknowledge, clarify, resolve.
- Systemic loop: convert repeated themes into process updates, training, policy changes, or product fixes.
The ‘You said, we did’ playbook
- Pick one theme you can fix quickly (clarity, a broken step, a handoff).
- Ship the change.
- Tell customers what changed and why (email, in-app note, release notes, support macros).
- Measure if the theme frequency drops.
A script that works
- Acknowledge: “Thanks for calling this out. You’re right, that step is confusing.”
- Action: “We changed the instructions and updated the workflow so it’s simpler.”
- Next: “If you hit it again, reply directly to me and we’ll fix it fast.”
This is how trust compounds: small improvements, visible follow-through.
CTA: Identify one repeat complaint, ship a fix in 7 days, and publish a ‘You said, we did’ note. Then watch what happens to confidence.
Set a response SLA (or it won’t happen)
Closed loop dies in ‘someone should follow up.’ Make it a rule.
- Score 0–6 NPS (or 1–2 CSAT): personal follow-up within 48 hours.
- Score 7–8: thank-you + ask one clarifying question within 5 days.
- Score 9–10: ask for a review/referral only after you’ve delivered value twice.
Internal routing that doesn’t break
Feedback has to land with the people who can actually fix it.
- Frontline owner logs theme and context (one sentence).
- Ops/product owner confirms root cause and proposed fix.
- Leadership approves priority when needed (weekly review).
- Customer gets a response: what changed or when it will.
The point is speed and clarity, not perfect bureaucracy.
When you can’t fix it (say this, not silence)
Sometimes a request conflicts with policy, security, or reality. You can still close the loop.
- Explain: “We can’t do X because it would create Y risk.”
- Offer: “Here’s what we can do instead: A, B, or C.”
- Commit: “We’ll revisit this in 60 days and update you.”
Make systemic feedback visible
Create a simple internal board: top themes, owner, next action, ship date. Visibility prevents ‘we’re working on it’ from turning into folklore.
A ‘You said, we did’ message you can reuse
Send this when you ship an improvement tied to feedback. Keep it short. Keep it specific.
- You said: “Invoices were confusing and we couldn’t tell what changed month to month.”
- We did: “We updated invoice layout and added a clear ‘changes’ section at the top.”
- Next: “If anything still looks off, reply to this email and we’ll fix it fast.”
Make it a rhythm
Weekly: review themes and assign actions. Monthly: publish a short internal summary (top themes, fixes shipped, impact). Quarterly: review whether your themes align to churn and growth. This is how feedback becomes an operating system, not a side quest.
CTA: Ship one fix in 7 days and publish a ‘You said, we did’ note. Make follow-through visible.
Footnotes
- Qualtrics XM Institute, “How to Create a Closed-Loop Program” (Mar 31, 2023). URL: https://www.qualtrics.com/articles/customer-experience/how-create-closed-loop-program/ Quote used: “enable an organization to systematically absorb and respond to customer feedback.”

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